hilarious to me that jay is accusing me of being somehow a crypto-anarcho-syndicalist, or biased and partial in my criticisms of the government's behaviour, and then he is meanwhile all the time getting his commentary on brexit from an openly partisan, proactively political mouthpiece like the national review. i mean a rag whose authors hold 'william f. buckley' chairs at nowhere universities/think tanks. what an incredible lack of self-awareness.
cute presentation though. it is a LITERAL demonstration of what i was talking about vis-a-vis people receiving their information online and via social media, by subtly (or in this case, not so subtle) political sources. no wonder jay took such issue with my comments about 5-second soundbite videos influencing people's politics. look at the fawning presentation here (just look at the careful choice of header images):
stories about johnson from recent events
https://www.nationalreview.com/news/uk- … -unlawful/ (plucky, smiling, unperturbed)
https://www.nationalreview.com/2019/09/ … just-done/ (deferential, decent, in good humour)
mention corbyn!
https://www.nationalreview.com/2019/09/ … -politics/ (mad, hysterical, irate, scary bloke!)
still, there's always a handy digest written by the serial fraudster conrad black, who has been thoroughly rejected by the british establishment for his unsavoury behaviour. just in case this whole brexit thing gets too confusing and you want a précis:
https://www.nationalreview.com/2019/09/ … of-brexit/some amazing analysis here, including that this goes back to the 'spanish armada' and that the great powers of nationhood since the '16th century' have been 'britain, france, spain' and ... 'turkey'. i mean i guess this all makes sense and good reading if you're historically illiterate and a moron.
Last edited by uziq (2019-09-26 03:40:39)